If NASA’s bet on its newest X-plane pays off, the long-nosed aircraft could revolutionize commercial aviation. That is, if history doesn’t repeat itself.
NASA is about to conduct the first flight of its X-59 aircraft, designed to redefine supersonic flight.
NASA and Lockheed Martin recently released photos of the X-59 "quiet" supersonic jet conducting tests of its afterburner, ...
After the first test flights in 2025, Lockheed Martin will transfer the plane to NASA. Then, after acoustic testing over ...
BUFFALO, N.Y. — An ambitious, multinational research project funded by NASA and co-led by the University at Buffalo has ...
Analysis of data from NASA radar aboard an airplane shows that the decades-old active landslide area on the Palos Verdes ...
Located at the agency’s Neil Armstrong Test Facility in Sandusky, Ohio, NASA’s Electric Aircraft Testbed (NEAT) is available ...
In the three years before the deadly collision between an Army helicopter and an American Airlines flight near Reagan ...
NASA is tracking two asteroids ... The asteroid is about 100 feet wide, similar to a large aircraft. It will travel at 19,091 miles per hour. At its closest, it will be 3,460,000 miles away ...
Multiple modern aerospace organizations and companies like NASA, Boom Supersonic, and Dawn Aerospace, have spent plenty of time and money to attempt to create a supersonic aircraft that could ...
By their junior year, students can choose a specific pathway, such as piloting, engineering, mechanics, or droning.